Ten Reasons to Adopt a Rescue Tamaskan

10. In a Word - Housebroken

With most family members gone during the work week for 8 hours or more, housetraining a puppy and its small
bladder can take awhile. Puppies need a consistent schedule with frequent opportunities to eliminate where you
want them to. They can't wait for the boss to finish his meeting or the kids to come home from after school
activities. An older dog can "hold it" much more reliably for longer time periods, and usually Rescue has him
housebroken before he is adopted.

9. Intact Underwear

With a chewy puppy, you can count on at least 10 mismatched pairs of socks and a variety of
unmentionables rendered to the "rag bag" before he cuts every tooth. And don't even think about shoes!
Also, you can expect holes in your carpet (along with the urine stains), pages missing from books,
stuffing exposed from couches, and at least one dead remote control. No matter how well you watch them,
it will happen --this is a puppy's job! An older dog can usually have the run of the house without
destroying it.

8. A Good Night's Sleep

Forget the alarm clocks and hot water bottles, a puppy can be be very demanding at 2am and 4am and 6am. He misses
his littermates, and that stuffed animal will not make a puppy pile with him. If you have children, you've been
there and done that. How about a little peace and quiet? How about an older rescue dog?

7. Finish the Newspaper

With a puppy running amok in your house, do you think you will be able to relax when you get home from work?
Do you think your kids will really feed him, clean up the messes, take him for a walk in the pouring rain
every hour to get him housetrained? With an adult dog, it will only be the kids running amok, because your
dog will be sitting calmly next to you, while your workday stress flows away and your blood pressure lowers
as you pet him.

6. Easier Vet Trips

Those puppies need their series of puppy shots and fecals, then their rabies shot, then a trip to be altered,
maybe an emergency trip or two if they've chewed something dangerous. Those puppy visits can add up (on top of
what you paid for the dog!) Your donation to the rescue when adopting an older pup should get you a dog with
all shots current, already altered, heartworm negative and on preventative at the minimum.

5. What You See Is What You Get

How big will that puppy be? What kind of temperament will he have? Will he be easily trained? Will his personality
be what you were hoping for? How active will he be? When adopting an older dog from a rescue, all of those
questions are easily answered. You can pick large or small; active or couch potato; goofy or brilliant; sweet or
sassy. The rescue and its foster homes can guide you to pick the right match. (Rescues are full of puppies who
became the wrong match as they got older!)

4. Unscarred Children (and Adults)

When the puppy isn't teething on your possessions, he will be teething on your children and yourself. Rescues
routinely get calls from panicked parents who are sure their dog is biting the children. Since biting implies
hostile intent and would be a consideration whether to accept a "give-up", Rescue Groups ask questions and usually
find out the dog is being nippy. Parents are often too emotional to see the difference; but a growing puppy is going
to put everything from food to clothes to hands in their mouths, and as they get older and bigger it definitely
hurts (and will get worse, if they aren't being corrected properly.) Most older dogs have "been there, done
that, moved on."

3. Matchmaker Make Me a Match

Puppy love is often no more than an attachment to a look or a color. It is not much of a basis on which
to make a decision that will hopefully last 15+ years. While that puppy may have been the cutest of the litter;
he may grow up to be superactive (when what you wanted was a couch buddy); she may be a couch princess (when
what you wanted was a tireless hiking companion); he may want to spend every waking moment in the water
(while you're a landlubber); or she may want to be an only child (while you are intending to have kids or
more animals). Pet mis-matches are one of the top reasons Rescues get "give-up" phone calls. Good rescues do
extensive evaluating of both their dogs and their applicants to be sure that both dog and family will be happy
with each other until death do them part.

2. Instant Companion

With an older dog, you automatically have a buddy that can go everywhere and do everything with you
NOW. There's no waiting for a puppy to grow up (and then hope he will like to do what you enjoy.)
You will have been able to select the most compatible dog; one that travels well; one that loves to
play with your friends' dogs; one with excellent house manners that you can take to your parents'
new home with the new carpet and the new couch. You can come home after a long day's work and spend
your time on a relaxing walk, ride or swim with your new best friend (rather than cleaning up
after a small puppy.)

1. Number One Reason - Bond ~ Rescue Dog Bond

Dogs who have been uprooted from their happy homes or have not had the best start in life are
more likely to bond very completely and deeply with their new people. Those who have lost their
families through death. divorce or lifestyle change go through a terrible mourning process. But,
once attached to a new loving family, they seem to want to please as much as possible to make sure
they are never homeless again. Those dogs that are just learning about the good life and good people
seem to bond even deeper. They know what life on the streets, life on the end of a chain, or worse is
all about, and they revel and blossom in a nurturing, loving environment. Most rescues make exceptionally
affectionate and attentive pets and extremely loyal companions.